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Guinea pigs, or cuy, are a delicacy in the Andes, as shown in Marcos Zapata's 1755 painting, The Last Supper. However, they can also be used to determine the isotopic signatures of geologic regions in the Andes. By comparing the cuy data with the isotope ratios found in archaeological human remains, bioarchaeologists can determine where an individual lived during the first and last years of life. Kelly J. Knudson and her colleagues have used strontium isotope analysis at 14 Tiwanaku- and Chiribaya-affiliated cemeteries to elucidate the nature of Tiwanaku influence from AD 500 to 1100.

 
 

In addition , Kelly J. Knudson and Christina Torres-Rouff of The Colorado College are currently combining biogeochemistry and bioarchaeology to examine biological and cultural identity during and after periods of Tiwanaku influence. With funding from the National Science Foundation, they are currently investigating identity construction, projection, and manipulation in northern Chile from AD 750 to 1470. Archaeological human remains from sites in the San Pedro de Atacama oasis and as well as the Loa River Valley site of Caspana, shown in the accompanying photo, will be included in this project.

 

 
 

Farther north, the Wari polity was contemporaneous with the Tiwanaku polity in the Andes. Isotope analysis of individuals buried in Wari-affiliated sites inside and outside of the Wari heartland in Ayacucho, Peru will illuminate the role of residential mobility in Wari political integration and expansion. Also, detailed life history studies of individuals who were transformed into trophy heads or dedicatory offerings will elucidate Wari ritual activities; this work is being pursued by Kelly J. Knudson and Tiffiny Tung of Vanderbilt University.


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